Adviser Update Spring 2016 | Page 7

7 giving a talk in 2006 to sixthgraders at his daughter’s middle school in Bethesda, Maryland. Two years later he established the News Literacy Project (NLP), a nonprofit where he is president and CEO. (Full disclosure, I am a director of the Dow Jones Foundation, which is a financial supporter of NLP.) Both organizations offer courses in news literacy, with the Center for News Literacy initially targeting college undergraduates and the News Literacy Project focusing on developing programs for middle school and high school students. Despite a growing interest in news literacy among educators and journalists, only a small fraction of the nation’s students have been touched by these and other programs to date. And there is an on-going debate about the long-term effectiveness of such training and how to measure it. In recent years, the highly regarded Columbia Journalism Review has carried a number of detailed articles and blogs on news literacy. Still, given the increasing difficulty of discerning the accuracy and value of news and information online, news literacy programs continue to expand. Not surprisingly, the programs are turning to digital technology to reach more people more quickly. One of the most ambitious projects is NLP’s development of a “cutting edge e-learning Howard Scheider platform” called “Checkology” as a resource for teachers that it hopes will serve as its “primary path to reaching national scale.” This new tool, scheduled to be available in early May, will include four interactive modules designed to enable students to learn, according to NLP, the following: how journalists and consumers filter news and information; why the First Amendment and free media are essential in a democracy; the challenges and opportunities created by the new information ecosystem; and, perhaps most important, “how to know what to believe.” The self-paced learning tool is designed to accomplish this in 10 lessons and about 12 instructional hours and it is targeted at students in the ninth and 10th grades. It will be offered to educators on a “freemium” basis that provides basic access at no cost. Premium features will be offered to subscribers The expanding efforts to promote news literacy are occurring against the backdrop of this year’s unusually raucous presidential election, underscoring the importance of being able to distinguish between truth and fiction as the Internet, social media, cable news and talk radio play an ever-greater role in our politics. If you aren’t already familiar with the programs and resources offered by the Center for News Literacy and the News Literacy Project, a visit to their websites is a good starting point.